A concise synopsis of gay-themed movies and gay interest films. Click on the photos to enlarge.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Kiss Me Deadly (2008)



















"Kiss Me Deadly" is the first installment of a planned spy franchise centered around gay former government agent Jacob Keane (Robert Gant) who can't seem to escape his former life. Keane is a photographer living the family life in Milan with his loving boyfriend Paolo (Nathan Whitaker) and Julia (Alessandra Muir), the daughter he shares with his lesbian friend Kyra (Katherine Kennard). Keane is pulled away from his boyfriend and daughter and back into the world of international espionage when his former partner Marta (Shannen Doherty) reappears after 17 years. With her memory erased, they now must elude a pair of ruthless assassins and a mysterious villain looking to gain classified information at any cost. What ensues is a fast paced game of cat and mouse as Keane must determine who wants them dead, and why.

The story begins on the eve of the fall of the Berlin Wall, as Keane and his partners Marta and Jared (Fraser Brown) are attempting to either get a man out of the country or learn something important from him. But before the assignment is completed there's an explosion and Marta is sent flying, with the mystery man lost in the flames. A few days later Keane learns that the Cold War has ended and he has lost his job. We fast-forward to the present with a montage of major political events moving through Bush, Clinton, another Bush, the World Trade Center attacks and the attacks on the Pentagon.

Keane is now living a comfortable life in Milan as a photographer specializing in rather tacky underwear campaigns. He kisses his assistant and has two of the male models pose together, so we realize rather quickly that Keane is gay. Marta reappears and leaves an urgent message on his answering machine that she is coming to Milan and must see him. He drops the kid off at Kyra’s house and heads to the train station to meet Marta. When he gets there he learns that she has amnesia and is being pursued by an evil thug. From here on the movie is all about learning why Marta can't remember anything and figuring out what Frosty the Hitman and his thug henchman Fredrick (Ian Roberts) are after. Keane has some pieces of the puzzle and must reconnect with his old agency after 20 years of retirement. As he does, he begins to wonder if they may be in on the scheme. He's also not telling Marta everything he knows, which leads her to become suspicious of him--especially when she regains memories of sleeping with him.

Keane kisses his lover goodbye and hits the road with Marta. The action moves to St. Albans, then to London, Zurich, and finally back again to Milan, keeping up a fast pace to make the viewer lose track of the story and overlook some holes in the plot. Along the way there's some gratuitous full-frontal male nudity which is frequently more distracting than anything else. After Keane and Marta leave town, they unearth some secrets and get a few more innocent people killed. It's strange that these super operatives are not very good at deducing the obvious solution to their situation. The climactic fist-fight between Keane and a beefy goon is the most satisfying action of the film, and not just because of the added joy of knowing that these are two strapping gay men wrestling one another to the ground.

"Kiss Me Deadly" is an action-packed spy thriller that has mixed reviews. The action is uneven, and a few of the scenes are so badly shot and edited that they're funny. There's a car chase where neither vehicle looks like it’s going over 15 miles per hour and a car crash where the vehicle suddenly flips over--off-screen. It's almost completely humorless and the characters don't have much electricity or chemistry with one another. But there are a few clever twists and unexpected shocks that keep things from getting too dour. Claude Foisy composed the original music, George Schenck and Frank Cardea wrote the screenplay, and Ron Oliver directed.

Clandestinos (2007)



















Gay, cute and charismatic Xabi (Israel Rodríguez) has been living in reformatories, detention centers, and prisons since he was abandoned as a child. His feral life led to a life behind bars. He seldom manages to escape, but does on one occasion and meets Iñaki (Luis Hostalot), a middle-aged ETA terrorist who becomes his friend, teacher and lover--a Basque separatist who instructs him about the nature of revolution. However, Xabi is sent to a high security correctional facility after throwing a gasoline bottle at a policeman in a street raid, nearly killing him. Xabi, with friend Joel (Hugo Catalán), a young Mexican, and a Moroccan named Driss (Mehroz Arif) who is going to be deported, manage to escape and arrive in Madrid. They are the "clandestinos" of the title.

Xabi looks for Iñaki because he wants to join the ETA, but cannot find him. Joel and Driss are more interested in hooking up with two girls they meet on the bus. Desperate to prove himself to the terrorist, Xabi plants bombs and robs unsuspecting johns. As Xabi tries to prove himself to Iñaki, he gets in over his head, especially when a john he picks up to rob turns out to be a police chief (Juan Luis Galiardo), and his plans begin to crumble. Finding Iñaki turns out to be difficult, because Iñaki doesn't want to be found. A far more serious terrorist, he's driving around with a trunk full of C-4 and doesn't want to reunite with his young acquaintance. Surprisingly, Xabi and Driss have some success with their homemade bomb, but their situation is doomed not only because the anti-terror squads are on their tail, but also because the comically slutty girls with whom Driss and Joel have shacked up start to have suspicions. They realize what is going on with Xabi and call the police. The ending is done poorly and is a disappointment

Politics and gay love come together in this melodrama, and as we go inside the heads of the three boys we end up with a pleasurable viewing experience. The film provides some wonderful eye candy (the shower scene in the prison, for example) but it tells us about the desire for acceptance and how to achieve it. The cast is very good and Israel Rodríguez as Xabi is excellent. But while the action here is exciting, the tone is quite wrong for the movie. Since when is terrorism a lark? Sergio De La Puente composed the original music. The screenplay was written by Gabriel Olivares and Antonio Hens, who also directed. In Spanish with English subtitles.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Taiikukan Baby (2008)



















During the summer high school preliminary swimming trials, senior ace swimmer Shibahara Jun (Nakamura Yuichi) loses to his rival Murai Naoki (Takahashi Yuta). Jun's father (Watanabe Ikkei), who is the team coach, says that rather than swim, he should concentrate on studying for his college entrance exams instead.
Naoki asks Jun to coach him in preparation for the Inter High, and Jun accepts the assignment. Though feeling disappointed and uncertain, Jun puts his heart into helping train swimming rival and teammate Naoki. They are attracted to each other. Spending countless hours together at the pool, the two form a close relationship. But their time together is soon cut short when Jun decides to quit the team, and Naoki plans to move to the United States. That night, at the swimming pool, Naoki suddenly kisses Jun.

This drama of forbidden love between two young men is an interesting coming of age film. Teenage love or infatuation is a strange, wonderful, frustrating experience, full of hope and despair, and we see it all in this movie. It has a nice ending. Based on the novel awarded the first prize at "The First Junon Love Novel Grand Prix", a Japanese magazine novel contest, youth romance films "Doukyusei" and "Taiikukan Baby" were released in Japan as a double bill. Set in the same world with the same cast and characters, the two films begin at the same point and spin into two different stories of young love. D-BOYS member Nakamura Yuichi of Princess Princess D and Kamen Rider Den-O leads both films as high school swimmer Shibahara Jun. Co-starring Prince of Tennis Musical star Takahashi Yuta and Kubo Sho. The boys love film "Taiikukan Baby" follows the confused and romantic triangle that develops between Jun and his two friends. The DVD includes a "making of", deleted scenes, outtakes, an interview, a press conference, and the trailer. Keiko Kanome and Yoshihiro Fukagawa wrote the screenplay, and Yoshihiro Fukagawa directed. In Japanese with English subtitles. The alternate titles are "Gymnasium Babies" and "Tai Iku Kan Baby".

Bob and Jack's 52-Year Adventure (2006)



















In this 41 minute documentary, Bob Claunch and Jack Reavley, two men in their late 70's, tell the story of their life long relationship. In 1952 Army Sergeant Bob Claunch was cornered and then courted by his commanding officer Lieutenant Jack Reavley. Their romance grew and soon became too obvious. Rumors became anonymous tips to headquarters. They avoided court-martial by confronting the entire unit and have been together ever since. That moment cemented Bob and Jack together for the rest of their lives. 52 years later they share how they remained a couple: how one left his wife and children, and how both survived in a small town in the Pacific Northwest. Beginning a new life and starting a radio station in Raymond, Washington, they later moved to Los Angeles to work as extras in movies. Today they battle the stigmas of being gay, a successful gay couple, and an active gay elderly couple. Bob and Jack recount the challenges they faced keeping their relationship intact, the issues they face growing old in a gay relationship, and their need for equal rights. It's a true, self-told story about lifelong love.

With the help of old footage and recordings they take us back to when they met, in the US Army in Munich, and they then guide us through their whole lives, through sickness and health, the good times and the bad times. The interviewer mostly lets Bob and Jack talk, but when he intervenes, he asks daring and relevant questions. It's cute, it's beautiful, but most of all it's important. The story of Bob and Jack is more than just a tribute to Bob and Jack themselves, it's more than a film about homosexuality. It's also a film about sticking together, about making it through the rough times, and it teaches us the most important thing of all: that love can keep us together if we are willing to work for it, and if we are nothing is impossible.

This charming, compelling, and inspiring film charts the course of their love affair over a half-century and beyond. Despite the rather unimaginative title, the film weaves together archival photos, audio recordings and present-day interviews to tell a remarkably conventional love story that, because it involves two men, makes it all the more remarkable. Director Stu Maddux filmed the interviews with one man closer to the camera, allowing us to see each man’s facial expressions when reacting to the other’s comments. Just like all old married couples, these guys finish each other’s sentences--that is, when they’re not interrupting each other. With all the debate over whether gay marriage should be allowed, it’s great to see that it has really existed all along. The DVD includes a Photo Gallery, the theatrical trailer, and a 1961 anti-gay educational film, "Boys Beware". Filmed in California, produced and directed by Stu Maddux.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Wrangler: Anatomy of an Icon (2008)



















"Wrangler: Anatomy of an Icon" is a straightforward documentary about Jack Wrangler, a spoiled Beverly Hills brat, an insecure homosexual, and an unsuccessful actor who became a self-made icon of gay porn films. Born Jack Stillman, his father was a producer of TV show "Bonanza" and Jack realized his sexual nature with his attraction to Michael Landon. When he reached the peak of the gay porn-star profession, he then made a big a name in straight porn, married a famous woman, and started several new careers. This detailed documentary takes you through Jack's mind and life with much footage of him, his work, his times, and many people who were around him.

Wrangler is the emcee of this event, sharing his story with interviews and a horde of stills and footage documenting his rise to a formidable object of lust. He becomes the face of the gay porn scene, changing feminine stereotypes with his "everyday man" image and aggressive marketing angles, revealing Wrangler to be a puzzling, intelligent human being. Gay men saw him as a hero and role model. He seems shocked at how much he accomplished, discussing the branding of his name on sex toys and poppers, and his personal appearances, where he would work out stand-up routines to throngs of gay men. Wrangler crossed over to straight porn and although he admitted to be gay, he was able to participate in very hot heterosexual sex scenes. His testimony is backed by a slew of cult icons, including Bruce Vilanch, Chi Chi LaRue, Sharon Mitchell, Marc Shaiman, and Jamie Gillis.

The last part is devoted to Wrangler's relationship with Margaret Whiting, the famous singer who fell in love with the young star, ignoring his career and his sexual activities. The pairing is given adequate screentime to appreciate, allowing a comfortable transition to explore Wrangler's declining years in the adult industry, and his eventual career as a legitimate musical theater presence. The end of this documentary feels like a roller coaster slowing to a halt, concluding a ride of amazing experiences and revelations, showcasing a man who in his own words, "wanted to take a bite out of life."

In this fascinating documentary, Wrangler looks back over his life, and his wild, unpredictable career and life is recounted in this funny, smart and sexy film. He had invented himself and had great determination. Even though the porn industry is part of his past, people will always refer to him as a former porn star. It is easy on the drama and tells us a lot of the obvious. Interesting though, is to hear him finally explain his marriage to Margaret Whiting and how that has worked all these years. Some of the comments he makes in interviews in the DVD "extras" section are more interestesing than those included in the film. Jeffrey Schwarz directed.

Sun Kissed (2007)



















The movie opens with a very good-looking man driving a truck along a desert highway. It is Teddy Rappaport (John Ort), a young aspiring writer on his way to his professor's isolated house to complete his first novel. He stops to pick up Leo Spaulding (Gregory Marcel), a handsome man waiting at a bus stop and the the mysterious caretaker of the house. When Leo and Teddy first meet they have sex after a beautiful interlude in the sun. Thus begins a romance which is filmed as soft core porn. Layers of memory and hallucination unfold that intertwine the two men. This is is the only part of the film that seems real.

Suddenly the plot switches both locations and chronologies and no explanation is given why. What could have been a beautiful love story becomes nonsense and questions are left unanswered, and even if we knew the answers I don't think we would care. When Teddy attempts a drunken seduction, Leo reveals a murky, mysterious and possibly dangerous past. What is the true nature of Leo’s relationship with Crispin (George Stoll), the older gay gentleman who owns the desert house where the two young men are staying? We witness Leo's slow sexual awakening, in painful conflict with his prejudices, obsessed with the idea "I am not homosexual." It is the supposed heterosexual who appears inwardly divided, in contrast to Teddy who knows that he is "completely" gay and draws an inner balance from this consciousness, in spite of his moments of despair. The loneliness of this couple in the middle of the loneliness of nature creates lots of atmosphere.

Intrigue and surrealist imagery dominate this gay-themed drama. Contemporary issues of sexuality, identity and creativity are explored through the young men's quests for love and intimacy. However, a plot with possibilities has poor and clumsy editing, horrible close-ups, and the overuse of the word "amazing". "Sun Kissed" is not a good movie. Typical viewer comments are "This is a nothing movie with a nothing story that feels and looks like a bad high school play" and "The quality of the film was horrible, sections of the movie must have been filmed with an 8 mm camera." It does have redeeming features though: good looking men, nudity and great music. Rockers "The Sea and the Cake" supply the music and if the songs were not there the plot would have been a disaster and the underlying bisexual theme would have suffered. Yet the music alone cannot make a good movie. It seems to be an Irish stew that would be a fine short, but as a full length film it falls flat. Of course, it does have some admirers. Patrick McGuinn wrote the screenplay and directed. He is the son of former "Byrds" rock band member Roger McGuinn.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Via Appia (1990)



















Via Appia is the nickname of a Rio district where male prostitutes hang out. There German flight attendant Frank (Peter Senner) hires Mario (Luiz Kleber), a young hustler for a one night stand. Before Mario departs the next morning, he leaves a message scrawled in soap on the bathroom mirror: "Welcome to the AIDS club" before stealing Frank's camera and disappearing. The HIV-infected former Lufthansa steward hooks up with a filmmaker who thinks it's a good idea to film Frank's return to Brazil in search of this guy. We get to see the mean streets of Brazil, the boys who earn their living there, and the sex tourists who prey upon them as they are in turn preyed upon. Probably the most interesting aspects of the film involve a savvy Brazilian boy of the streets who attaches himself to the filming party and joins the search. The film crew looks for Mario, and Frank with his director and the fast talking hustler José (Guilherme di Padua) try to find Mario--who always seems to have just left whenever they arrive.

This is an interesting documentary based on the misfortunes of a gay flight attendant who likes to vacation in Brazil. The documentary is somewhat slow at certain points but it is all in context and helps to portray Frank's desperation. There is a lot of nudity and tends to show the stereotypical gay persona of man as sexual predator, but over-all the insight into the hidden side of Brazilian culture and the thought-provoking subject matter make it worthwhile. The film is no longer as topical as when it was first made because the mystery surrounding the disease has been reduced. Charly Schöppner composed the original music, and Jochen Hick wrote the screenplay and directed. Filmed in German and Portuguese with English subtitles.

Coffee Date (2006)



















Straight-laced Todd (Jonathan Bray) arrives at a cafe for a blind date with Kelly (Wilson Cruz), whom he expects to be a girl. When Kelly turns out to be a hunky gay man, Todd discovers that he has been the victim of a prank by his brother Barry (Jonathan Silverman), who had placed an ad for his romance-starved straight brother on an internet "M4M" message board. Todd's mundane world is quickly turned inside out and he finds out that he has a lot of interests in common with his new gay friend. They decide to get revenge on Barry by pretending they are actually now a gay couple.

When Todd brings Kelly home, he sneaks out the window so Barry believes Todd spent the night with a man. It works too well, since Barry won't believe that Todd isn't really gay, and moves out of Todd's apartment. The joke soon goes further than they expected when Todd's family and friends all believe him to be gay. Everybody including his mother try to thrust him towards this new romantic endeavor. Todd continues to go with Kelly, and occasionally his friends, to see a movie, have a drink or coffee, and when the office gossip monger Clayton (Jason Stuart) sees Todd with a group of gay men, he "outs" him to everyone else at work, who accept and embrace the revelation. Despite his repeated attempts to prove otherwise, Todd soon finds himself doubting his own sexuality, and feelings toward Kelly.

"Coffee Date" is a fast-paced light hearted comedy filled with sexual shenanigans of a misguided kind. It handles the simplistic slapstick plot with realism, warmth and humor, showing the boundaries of friendship, sex and human compassion. The Village Voice calls it, "A warmhearted tale carried by genuine affection and a charming cast." It's great to see two of the top gay actors play gay characters in a gay film. In addition to acting in the film, Deborah Gibson (Melissa) wrote and performed the closing credits song. Originally a 2001 short film by writer/director Stewart Wade, it was expanded into a feature and played at various film festivals. Eban Schletter composed the original music, and Stewart Wade wrote the screenplay and directed.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Breakfast with Scot (2007)



















Eric McNally (Thomas Cavanagh) is a gay retired hockey player turned TV sportscaster who lives with his partner Sam (Ben Shenkman), a sports lawyer. When Sam unexpectedly becomes the temporary legal guardian of his brother's stepson Scot (Noah Bernett), an 11-year-old orphan whose mother died of a drug overdose, their lives are turned upside down. The mother was the common-law wife of Sam’s brother Billy (Colin Cunningham), who left for Brazil promising to return and leaving the boy in the custody of child services. Scot is an effeminate sissy who loves boas, beads and Broadway musicals. The presence in Eric's home of an auburn-haired girlie-boy with a flouncing gait threatens his masculine self-image, not to mention his reputation as a macho sports hero. What makes Eric’s situation confusing is that his colleagues in broadcasting all know he is gay. Eric even admits that during his years as a professional player he was nicknamed Erica.

Sam believes Scot’s fondness for dressing up in his mother’s clothes and jewels and donning make-up is an unconscious expression of his grief and loneliness, a way of staying by her side. The impulsive kiss that Eric plants on Sam’s lips at a party late in the movie comes across more as an expression of horror than as a sign of his liberation from homophobia. He doesn’t begin to bond with Scot until he discovers that the boy can skate. At last he can both play surrogate father and demonstrate traditional manhood by channeling the boy’s twirling and dipping figure-skating talent toward hockey. Eric's unwillingness to become a parent eventually fades as Scot teaches Eric about accepting and loving your true self.

"Breakfast with Scot" is derived from the 2001 novel by Michael Downing, and viewers who have read the book are quite disappointed with this film. In the book the couple are a chiropractor and an editor at an Italian art magazine in Cambridge, Mass. The movie changes their occupations and moves the story to Toronto, Canada. It's a comedy with a message, quite well done in all departments. Damian Rogers wrote it's "a good-natured film about tolerance, acceptance and just being yourself." Robert Carli composed the original music, and Sean Reycraft wrote the screenplay based on Michael Downing's novel. Laurie Lynd directed.

KM.0 (2000)



















The title refers to Madrid's central square, from which all distances within Spain are measured. Zero may also describe the state of the lives and stories of the 14 lonely strangers whose lives intersect and collide at this popular meeting point on a sweltering August afternoon. Chaos ensues when four pairs of strangers each make plans to meet. Mistaken identities and second chances are among the results of this comedy of errors featuring horny gay university student Máximo (Armando del Río), an internet-love seeking flamenco dancer (Victor Ullate Jr.), macho lovelorn gigolo Miguel (Jesús Cabrero), an actress, and a businessman starved for new sexual experiences. A young film director (Carlos Fuentes) arrives in town to meet his sister's friend, hooker Tatiana (Elisa Matilla) waits for her next trick, a woman married to a workaholic husband hires a male escort, a young woman whose fiancé is a morose waiter at a Km.0 bar and her younger sister appear, and then there's the male escort's roommate Benjamín (Miguel García). Multiple cases of mistaken identity lead almost everyone to the wrong pairing, and ultimately all 14 strangers become involved in this tangle of love and lust.

Several locals become drawn into the mix as well, including a local bartender (Alberto San Juan) who dreams of owning his own business, the bartender's shallow, robbery-prone fiancée Amor (Silke Klein) and her younger sister, a police officer (Roberto Álamo) with impulse control issues, and a mysterious stranger who seems rather bemused by the whole scenario. Sexuality is celebrated in all forms, including physical relations between older women and younger men, friendly intimacy and flirting between straight men and gay men, and the goal of helping a prostitute to earn what she's worth, rather than rescuing her from the profession. At first glance, all the connections may seem a little confusing, but the pacing is steady and the characters larger than life, so you never have that much trouble following all the diverse episodes. There are also various subplots that effectively bounce off each intersection of the characters.

The plot is contrived, the coincidences abound, but the characters find unexpected love and rejoice in the rain. It's a sweet film, fun and sexy without becoming overly graphic, politically incorrect, a romantic drama where the topic of sex pops up constantly, with very unexpected twists and turns that are woven into the plot. "KM.0" is a fast-paced, creative and warmly captivating farce the shows that serendipity, providence, and life's choices and coincidences can sneak up on us when we least expect it. The characters are genuine and likable, and the direction and cinematography are very good. It has a refreshingly earnest sexual frankness, which is both hip and cute at the same time. Joan Bibiloni composed the music, and both Yolanda García Serrano and Juan Luis Iborra wrote the screenplay and directed. In Spanish with English subtitles.

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